Archive for August, 2007

Happy birthday, India

Saturday, August 18th, 2007

The world’s largest democracy turns 60, having written an epic success story

Friday, August 10, 2007

By Shashi Tharoor

At midnight on Aug. 15, 1947, a new nation was born on a subcontinent ripped apart by a bloody partition. Independent India came into being as flames blazed across the land, corpse-laden trains crossed the new frontier with Pakistan and weary refugees abandoned everything to seek a new life. A less propitious start for a fledgling nation could scarcely be imagined.



Shashi Tharoor is a former under secretary-general of the United Nations. Copyright Project Syndicate, 2007. (www.projectsyndicate.com)



 

Yet, six decades later, India is the world’s largest democracy, poised after years of rapid economic growth to take its place as one of the giants of the 21st century. A country whose very survival seemed in doubt at its founding offers striking lessons in constructing, against all odds, a working democracy.

No other country embraces such an extraordinary profusion of ethnic groups, mutually incomprehensible languages, religions and cultural practices. Given this, and the challenges of administering a new country, integrating the “princely states” into the Indian Union and reorganizing the divided armed forces, India’s first leaders could have been forgiven for demanding dictatorial powers.

Instead, they made a strength out of India’s major weakness. To the American motto, “E Pluribus Unum,” they could only counter, “E Pluribus Pluribum.” Rather than suppressing its diversity in the name of national unity, India’s institutional arrangements acknowledged the country’s pluralism.

This wasn’t always easy. India suffered caste conflicts, clashes over the rights of different linguistic groups, religious riots and separatist threats. But, despite many stresses and strains, India has remained a freewheeling multi-party democracy — corrupt and inefficient, perhaps, but nonetheless flourishing.

It helped that India’s founding fathers, from Mahatma Gandhi on, were convinced democrats. India’s first and longest-serving prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, spent his political career instilling in his people the habits of democracy: disdain for dictators, respect for parliamentary procedures and abiding faith in the constitutional system. Though there was no serious challenger to his authority, Nehru never forgot that he derived his power from India’s people, to whom he remained astonishingly accessible.

By his personal example, democratic values became so entrenched that when his own daughter, Indira Gandhi, suspended India’s freedoms in 1975 with a 21-month state of emergency, she felt compelled to seek vindication from the Indian people. Having imbibed her father’s democratic values, she held a free election, which she overwhelmingly lost.

Of course, Indian politics is hardly immune to the appeal of sectarianism. But its people have come to accept the idea of India as one land embracing many differences of caste, creed, color, culture, cuisine, conviction, costume and custom, yet still rallying around a democratic consensus. The heart of that consensus is the principle that you don’t need to agree all the time — except on the ground rules about how you can disagree.

As a result, no one speaks seriously any more of the danger of disintegration. Separatist movements in far-flung places like Tamil Nadu and Mizoram have been quietly defused by a simple formula: Yesterday’s secessionists become today’s chief ministers (the equivalent of American state governors) and tomorrow’s opposition leaders.

Moreover, Indian democracy is not an elite preoccupation. Whereas in the United States, a majority of the poor do not vote, in India the poor turn out en masse. Thus, the explosive potential of caste division also has been channeled through the ballot box, with the lowest of the low attaining high office. Mayawati, an “untouchable” woman, has ruled India’s most populous state, Uttar Pradesh, as chief minister three times, and now enjoys a secure majority.

More generally, the logic of the electoral marketplace means that no single communal identity can dominate others. Three years ago, India, a country that is 81 percent Hindu, saw a Roman Catholic (Sonia Gandhi) make way for a Sikh (Manmohan Singh), who was sworn in as prime minister by a Muslim (President Abdul Kalam). By contrast, the world’s oldest democracy, the United States, has yet to elect a president who is not white, male and Christian.

Democracy has sustained an India that safeguards the common space available to each identity. That idea has knit together a country that many thought would not survive, and whose 60th birthday is therefore well worth celebrating.

Products for oily skin

Saturday, August 11th, 2007

Q: I viewed the product line and personally I have no idea which would be best for me. I have normal to (not very) oily skin (T-zone).  I need something with a sunblockthat can keep my skin matte.  Also, can you recommend other products for marksand what I will need for my skin type. Meena

A: Click FACE section on the www.cosmetics-hair.com home page and look for

1. Clear Mask Pack: Page 1 For removing skin impurities

2. Care Arbutin Whitening Cream Essence: Page 1  For the marks if they are dark.or White Melanin care Arbutin cream: Page 2 For the marks if they are dark.

3. Oil free Cleanser Page 2 For normal skin cleansing

4. Sunblock Cream: Page 2 In the Skin Section

5. Skin Toner : Page 1 or Herbal Skin Toner Hanbang  Page 1

These products when used in combination and recommended sequence will satisfy your requirements.

Irina

www.cosmetics-hair.com

Skin Care for Men

Saturday, August 11th, 2007

Q: I need some advice with using sin care creams …. i have many spots on my forehead and cheeks … i have just about used most products including clarasil ultra rapid action treatment cream (which supposedly makes visibly clearer skin in just 3 days!) even tht didn’t work …. would u giv me some tips as to which may be the most suitable for my spots and oily skin …. i am male nd 19 frm UK.

A: Many thanks for your enquiry. I am suggesting the following course of action to solve your problem.

1. Please visit: www.cosmetics-hair.com. You will find a row of buttons “Body”, “Face”, “Skin”…

2. Try the following of our products:

a. In “Face” you will find a product Scrub Foam. Use it. This is the first cleansing step.

b. Next in the same section “Face” you will also find Mask Sheet Pack. In this product their are several varieties. Please choose Green Tea Pack out of them. Use it next.

c. In the “Skin” section you will find Jewellery Essence Cream and Herbal Skin Toner

Hanbang. As the next step,please use these products as directed.

 d. Finally, every night you may use Care Arbutin Whitening cream Essence which you will find in the face section.

3. You are encouraged to look at many other products for skin,body and face for regular use which will gradually improve the skin. Please also see the section on “Men”.

Ravi,

www.cosmetics-hair.com

Stock picks

Thursday, August 9th, 2007

I am new at investing in the stock market. 

I think the Indian Stock Market is poised to expand steadily. Profits of the BSE Index companies is growing 20 to 30% tis year so keeping th same PE multiples, it seems very likely that the Index will grow by atleast 20 - 30% this year.

So if I stay invested in the Index companies I should atleast equal the index?

Which companies are good picks for 6 to 12 months?

Rama

The wonders of the Internet

Thursday, August 9th, 2007

I attended the Global Internet Summit in Dubai in December 2006. Before that I had attended a teaser 2 hrs given by Richard Tan in October 2006 and his pitch convinced me to sign up for the US$ 800 program.

I did not know anything about Internet businesses or websites but it all sounded very interesting and something with great potential.

So promptly I conceived of 3 businesses based on what I knew at that time. Selling Korean cosmetics- I had a supplier, incorporating offshore companies in the tax haven of Seychelles - again I had some experience in this, and offering online consultancy for restructuring small and medium businesses.

Writing up the project outlines was easy. The I blundered through Elance ad Rentacoder.com. Put my projects up for bidding and then was completely bewildered on how to move further forward.

I signed up for David Cavanagh’s newbie course and Tom Hua’s ebooks. These got me started. Ravindr Deshpande, a close colleague worked with me and helped me with the drudgery of catalogues and the back and forth checking of the contractor’s progress. - I cringe at the thought of checking the web site line by line!

The wonderful thing was that I could access truly fantastic people who helped me with newsletters, copy writing, emails, content, payment gateways, MS Front page and SEO.

I had 2 websites live within 7 months of starting work on them as a newbie. Only the wonderful world of the WEB could make this happen!

Rama

Am I doing enough?

Thursday, August 9th, 2007

Sometimes I feel I am not doing enough in life. When is enough?

I am developing 3 Internet businesses, expanding a children’s clinic, building a logistics business for a friend and working on my spiritual program.

Every few months I feel I am not doing enough and I want to tinker with my life. Mostly seek a geographical solution! I know I shouldn’t, but…

Rama

Choosing to out source

Thursday, August 9th, 2007

Hi,

I have been working on out sourcing the creation of a website, www.restructuringhelp.com to offer business restructuring consultancy since October 2006.

The first contractor in Serbia returned my advance in January 2007 without any progress. He kept having various personal problems.

The next contractor, in Indore, India ended up costing me US$ 300 and I have a website which doesn’t work. I paid half to get my files.

The third contractor in Dhaka, Bangladesh cost me US$ 200 as advance after which he has disappeared. He built another site for me very satisfactorily. I cannot locate him.

Now I have contracted a 4th company in Ahmedabad, India and am hoping to see some result.

Thankfully, 2 other web sites I started in October 2006 are now live. www.taxhavencompany.com and www.cosmetics-hair.com.

Now I wonder whether I shouldn’t get into the consultancy business?

When am I going to have my first sale?

Thursday, August 9th, 2007

Hello,

I went live with www.cosmetics-hair.com in June 2006 and am marketing it through forums, an expanding email list and SEO. So far I have about 1200 unique visitors who are deciding on whether to buy from my site.

What should I do next?

Rama